Spain, Italy and France to study transplant chain
There are more than 162 couples willing to cross a kidney transplant | In June he held the Intercontinental chain first transplant.

"
At this time, according to data provided by this organization, there are 72 couples willing to cross a kidney transplant, while in France there are another 70 and Italy 20. ...
"The closing of this agreement would open the door to cross-border donation and transplantation in Europe (Spain had isolated interventions in Portugal) .
...
" Last June, the Alliance of Paired Donation agency reported the completion of the first transplant in U.S. international chain, incorporating two Greek citizens."
*****

On the APD exchange between Greece and the U.S., see previous post here.

"It's not easy to explain now, but at 8 years old, Liz Gay knew that she would
one day donate a kidney.
Not just knew — felt called by God.
...
"Gay is what's known as an altruistic donor, a healthy person who donated a kidney without a specific person in mind as the recipient. To start the donation process, Gay went to the Alliance for Paired Donation and signed up to donate.

"Once she passed through the screening and testing process, a recipient was selected, a man living across the Atlantic Ocean.

"Michalis Helmis, a resident of Greece, had been on dialysis for six years. Initially, his wife, Theodora Papaioannou-Helmis, signed up to be his donor. But when doctors ran the tests, they determined she wasn't a match.

"Theodora Papaioannou-Helmis spent the next two years lobbying Greek politicians to change the country's law restricting organ donation.

“The only reason I did that is I believed he could not be on dialysis for his whole life,” she said through a translator. “I just couldn't accept that, and I had to do it to get him well.”

"Under Greek law, only spouses and first-degree relatives could donate kidneys to other family members. Once the law was modified, the couple flew to Ohio.

"The agreement was that Gay's kidney would go to Michalis Helmis, and a few months later, Theodora Papaioannou-Helmis would come back to the states and donate her kidney to a man in Pennsylvania.

"Everything worked out as planned, and a few months later, Michalis Helmis feels healthier than he has in years. He still can't believe Gay's generosity."
******************

The story about the Oklahoma donor includes a great line about Mike Rees:
"Dr. Michael Rees, the Alliance for Paired Donation chief executive officer,
describes himself as “probably the biggest advocate of paired kidney
donation.”

Friday, September 28, 2012

"WASHINGTON — The government took a big step on Friday to aid the creation of new high-speed wireless Internet networks that could fuel the development of the next generation of smartphones and tablets, and devices that haven’t even been thought of yet.

"The five-member Federal Communications Commission unanimously approved a sweeping, though preliminary, proposal to reclaim public airwaves now used for broadcast television and auction them off for use in wireless broadband networks, with a portion of the proceeds paid to the broadcasters.

"The initiative, which the F.C.C. said would be the first in which any government would pay to reclaim public airwaves with the intention of selling them, would help satisfy what many industry experts say is booming demand for wireless Internet capacity."
***********
Paul Milgrom is leading an impressive group of auction designers in the novel technical aspects of this effort.

As I wrote in March, Washington State auctioned off its state liquor stores in an online auction that opened March 6, 2012 and closed April 20, using an entirety auction, in which either all the stores would be sold together to one bidder, or each store would be sold separately. The separate bidders won. However, 18 of them failed to come forward and pay their bids, and so a second re-auction followed, on May 24. (The re-auction of those 18 seems to have been well attended.)

By the Numbers
• Total sum of individual bids $30.75 million
• High all-store bid $4.6 million (will not count)
• Registered bidders 551
• Total number of bids 14,627
• Single stores to individuals 93
• Multiple stores to individuals 28
• Lowest winning bid $49,600 for Store 186 in Spokane (Division street)
• Highest winning bid $750,100 for Store 122 in Tacoma (72nd and Pacific)
• Increase in bids on final day $23.7 million

Like many online auctions, if a bid was placed during the final five minutes of the auction, the end time would automatically extend for an additional five minutes. The official planned end of the auction was 4:00 p.m. PDT. However, heavy bidding activity extended the auction until 6:25 p.m. Friday evening.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

"After years of complaints from parents over how complicated it can be to register a student in New Orleans public schools, the city's top education officials have come tantalizingly close to bringing every school within one streamlined enrollment system. A single obstacle remains: persuading a dozen or so independent charter schools -- including four selective magnet schools whose limited seats are especially prized -- to join a common application. It's a turning point that will affect how thousands of pupils go about choosing a school and help shape a first-of-its-kind public education system, potentially knitting back together an enrollment process balkanized by the momentous changes that took place after Hurricane Katrina."The charter schools in question are the 12 that fall under theOrleans Parish School Board, the elected body that lost control of most city schools to the state-runRecovery School Districtafter the storm, along with three charter schools in New Orleans -- known as Type 2 charters -- that are authorized by the state board of education and accept students from around the state.

"In a rare joint interview this week, officials with the School Board and the Recovery District said they are deep into conversations with each of those schools about joining the OneApp; all of them are governed by independent charter boards that will make the decision for each school."

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

LSU Gives Scholarship Offer To 8th Grader
"It's a scene that plays out on college campuses every single summer, although
this offer was different for one main reason -- Dylan Moses has yet to start
eighth grade.

"Considering the Tigers are only just starting to hand out offers to members
of the Class of 2014, it came as a bit surprise for a 2017 prospect to get
one."

"Washington made a splash in the recruiting world Wednesday, but don't bother checking the ESPN 150 for the newest Huskies commit. He won't be included in that list this year, next year or the one after that.

"It's highly unlikely a single Washington player still will be on the roster by the time Tate Martell makes an appearance in purple and gold, but after receiving a scholarship offer from the Huskies three weeks ago, the soon-to-be eighth-grade quarterback committed to coach Steve Sarkisian on Wednesday, Martell's father, Al, confirmed to ESPN.com.

"The Washington coaching staff is not able to confirm whether it has accepted the commitment from the 14-year-old Martell. Schools are not able to offer a written scholarship until Sept. 1 of a prospect's senior season, according to NCAA rules. Martell won't be able to sign a national letter of intent until Feb. 1, 2017."

"As I noted here, the University of Chicago Law Review and California Law Review are no longer accepting submissions from ExpressO. They now accept articles submitted for five dollars a pop via Scholastica. The Stanford Law Review and Yale Law Journal only accept pieces submitted through their proprietary submission systems. The anachronistic law review publication system has always been problematic - both because law students with limited knowledge make the big decisions and because, given multiple submissions and an expedite bid system, those student editors are asked to read vastlymore articles than they are ever going to have a shot at publishing. (Of course the two are related; you could never find enough faculty volunteers to referee one article seventy-five times per submission season. And efforts to create a referee bank - like this - have had limited success.)

I strongly suspect that the volume generated by the low-cost convenience of ExpressO might literally be breaking this camel's back. If ever there was a time to get journals on board for some sort of rationalization, it might be now. "

A few different things are intertwined here: the long waiting lists, the congested process of offering kidneys and having them accepted or rejected and offered to the next person on the list, and the ordering of the list, which in turn might influence how often people need a second transplant, which comes back to how long the waiting lists are...

There are lots of interesting and important questions about how to most efficiently allocate the scarce supply (see e.g. Zenios et al.)

But
organ allocation has an unusual aspect: how organs are allocated may also
influence the supply, by changing donation behavior. I'll be giving a seminar this afternoon on aspects of that question (in joint work with Judd Kessler):

Sunday, September 23, 2012

I've written before about the culture of universities and the obstacles that face new ones. The 2012 game theory world congress was hosted by Istanbul Bilgi University, which turns out to be quite a new institution. Its Rector Remzi Sanver is a well known member of the game theory/social choice/economic design community, and his opening address refers to some of the difficulties he faces as the head of a new, secular university in Turkey.

"Istanbul Bilgi University, since its foundation, has taken clear and
unequivocal positions throughout the democratization process of our country.
That encompasses a long list of conferences held within our offices when no one
wanted to host such conferences, as well as students accepted in classes when
sartorial conditions were imposed almost everywhere else. We have been harshly
criticized for most of our positions and deeds. We are still sometimes severely
criticized, but we continue to abide by our values, which are universally and
largely accepted, to safeguard our liberal and pluralistic stance."

Saturday, September 22, 2012

"Using data from more than 50,000 living donor
transplants from 1998 through 2003, researchers at the University of British
Columbia concluded that the
age of the donor made no difference to the eventual success of the
transplant — except for recipients ages 18 to 39, who were more likely to
succeed with a donor their own age. Patients in this group accounted for about a
quarter of all the patients studied.

The scientists also analyzed lists of people waiting
for a kidney from a deceased donor and found that the probability of becoming
ineligible for donation within three years was high, varying from 21 percent to
66 percent, depending on age, blood group and severity of disease.

Waiting can be fatal, the authors contend, and an
offer of a kidney should not be rejected simply because of the donor’s age."

"The European Commission, the guardian of European Union treaties, has been working on ways to make life easier for people who move across borders.

"But although for two years it has been studying ways to facilitate the free circulation of civil status documents, including birth, death and marriage certificates, the proposal is still awaiting action. And when it goes forward later this year, the plan may not cover marriage. “For now, I think it is important to take one step at a time,” Viviane Reding, the European justice commissioner, said in an e-mailed response to questions.

"Opponents of gay marriage argue that any attempt in Brussels to require countries to recognize same-sex marriage certificates issued in another member state would, in effect, require them to introduce gay marriage whether they wanted to or not.

“A general application of the rule of mutual recognition of civil status documents will result in a situation where the political and social choices of some member states would be imposed on all the others,” CARE for Europe, a Christian lobby group, argued in its submission to the commission, echoing numerous opponents.

"So for now, gay couples and families are fighting their own battles — often at considerable expense."

Thursday, September 20, 2012

"ProblemLos Angeles (Calif.) Unified School District enrolls over 680,000
students, and the Budget Services and Financial Planning office uses enrollment
forecasts on which to base resource allocations to schools. This process
determines the number of teachers, textbooks, supplies, custodians, nurses,
administrators and food service staff at each school campus. Enrollment
forecasting has high stakes, but like every other district in the nation, LAUSD
has made major financial cutbacks—$1.5 billion between 2008 and 2010. One
program on the chopping block in 2009 was Roadshow, an in-person
student-enrollment-forecasting review process that cost over $400,000 annually.
So LAUSD needed to find a new, cost-effective forecasting review
process.
"Solution

"The answer was an online program. In January 2010, LAUSD launched the
Electronic School Forecasting System, known as E-CAST, an Internet-based
platform that replaced Roadshow. The in-person review process had consumed 8,700
staff hours, 17,000 reimbursable travel miles for visits to schools and 52,000
paper data collection forms over the six-week review. “Back in 2006, it was
pretty clear that it would be helpful to move this process online to make it
more efficient without wasting time and expense in the field gathering data,”
says Valerie Edwards, chief enrollment analysis coordinator at LAUSD."
...

"Looking Forward

"After tackling forecast enrollment, LAUSD is now discussing the possibility
of adding a school-capacity assessment module to E-CAST to evaluate space and
seating capacities. According to Edwards, space use varies in middle and high
school classrooms more than elementary classrooms, where students spend the
majority of their day with the same teacher.
“We want to use algorithms to figure out utilization and track classroom
spaces electronically. LAUSD can use this information to make sure the district
is effectively using space and to plan for maintenance and operations,” says
Edwards.
It’s essential, as the district has over 13,000 buildings and about 8,000
projects, ranging from moving portable units to building new schools. If
everything goes as planned, Edwards says the school-capacity assessment module
should be operational in the 2013-2014 school year."

"A clever hacker today has to make tough choices. Find a previously unknown
method for dismantling the defenses of a device like an iPhone or iPad, for
instance, and you can report it to Apple and present it at a security conference
to win fame and lucrative consulting gigs. Share it with HP’s Zero Day
Initiative instead and earn as much as $10,000 for helping the firm shore up its
security gear. Both options also allow Apple to fix its bugs and make the
hundreds of millions of iPhone and iPad users more secure."But any hacker who happens to know one Bangkok-based security researcher who
goes by the handle “the Grugq”–or someone like him–has a third option: arrange a
deal through the pseudonymous exploit broker to hand the exploit information
over to a government agency, don’t ask too many questions, and get paid a
quarter of a million dollars–minus the Grugq’s 15% commission."..."The Grugq is hardly alone in his industry. Small firms like Vupen, Endgame
and Netragard buy and sell exploits, as do major defense contractors like
Northrop Grumman and Raytheon.
"Netragard’s founder Adriel Desautels says he’s been in the exploit-selling
game for a decade, and describes how the market has “exploded” in just the last
year. He says there are now “more buyers, deeper pockets,” that the time for a
purchase has accelerated from months to weeks, and he’s being approached by
sellers with around 12 to 14 zero-day exploits every month compared to just four
to six a few years ago."
***********

And here's a related article about a French firm, Vupen (which describes itself as follows: "As the leading source of
advanced vulnerability research, VUPEN provides government-grade exploits
specifically designed for the Intelligence community and national security
agencies to help them achieve their offensive cyber security and lawful
intercept missions using extremely sophisticated codes created in-house by
VUPEN.).")

Muriel Niederle and I will be teaching an introduction to market design this quarter (the first quarter of a three quarter graduate sequence whose other quarters will be taught by Paul Milgrom and Fuhito Kojima).

The first class session is on Monday September 24.

This will be the first course I've taught at Stanford since 1978 (when I taught a course on Axiomatic Models of Bargaining, while on leave from the University of Illinois), and it will likely resemble the market design course I taught last Fall at Harvard. You can find the web page for that course, which includes the slides I lectured from here. (Since this will be followed by a quarter taught by Paul Milgrom, we plan to spend less time on auctions than when I taught at Harvard, and more time on matching markets: see the course description below.)

We think the class might be interesting not only to economists but also to operations researchers and computer scientists...

This is an introduction to market design, intended mainly for second year PhD students in economics (but also open to other graduates students from around the university and to undergrads who have taken undergrad market design). It will emphasize the combined use of economic theory, experiments and empirical analysis to analyze and engineer market rules and institutions. In this first quarter we will pay particular attention to matching markets, which are those in which price doesn¿t do all of the work, and which include some kind of application or selection process. In recent years market designers have participated in the design and implementation of a number of marketplaces, and the course will emphasize the relation between theory and practice, for example in the design of labor market clearinghouses for American doctors, and school choice programs in a growing number of American cities (including New York and Boston), and the allocation of organs for transplantation. Various forms of market failure will also be discussed.Assignment: One final paper. The objective of the final paper is to study an existing market or an environment with a potential role for a market, describe the relevant market design questions, and evaluate how the current market design works and/or propose improvements on the current design.